Meet the Military 'Base in a Box'

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Forces often need to operate in areas where the local
infrastructure is rudimentary at best or has collapsed. Kitchen,
laundry, water and sanitation facilities are essential for forces
that will be based at home but on contingency status -- meaning
those needing to deploy quickly.

Fortunately, the forward operating base (FOB) now comes in one
big box.

The box part of these pop-ups are standard shipping containers,
meaning they can be transported just like anything else by air,
water, road or rail. They're stackable too, plus they can be
hoisted about and put on a pallet with a standard hook lift or
maneuvered by truck and crane and then easily unveil a kitchen,
bathroom and more.

Many companies have been moving into meeting this requirement,
but Camp Supply International hailing from Norway is leading the
FOB in a box pack. Drawing upon experience in Bosnia, Kosovo,
Macedonia and more recently Afghanistan, the company has
succeeded in containerizing the basic needs of a base.

A standard kitchen that can produce meals for 300 to 600
comprises four containers that can be set up by two people within
ten hours. It can be augmented with two additional containers to
feed 500 to 1,000 -- and by modifying it with six containers it
can feed 3,000 soldiers.

What does a pop-up kitchen look like? All of the interior walls,
including the ceiling and floor, are stainless steel providing
compliance with hygiene requirements in style.

Forces often deploy to areas where contagious diseases spread by
viruses, micro-organisms and parasites pose a threat. These
kitchens in a box tackle this problem with UVC and
air-optimization systems.

UVC, ultra violet radiation or UV light, disinfects water, air
and surfaces prevents microbes from breeding by damaging the
genetic material. Some microbes can evolve to resist chemicals
and antibiotics; UVC solves the resistance problem.

The application of this technology -- which is designed to meet
Center for Disease Control and WHO’s tightest bio-safety
guidelines and is also useful for the sanitary and laundry
pop-ups -- sets Camp Supply International apart from other
manufacturers.

How comfortable and hardy are these “boxes”? These containers are
designed to meet the challenge of extreme conditions ranging from
the Arctic to the desert. With up to eight inches of insulating
material, water “pipe in pipes” equipped with self-regulating
heating cables, and air intakes with sand and snow traps, Camp
Supply's boxes can function seamlessly in spite of extreme
weather from -58 degrees to 122 degrees Fahrenheit.

Laundry and Loos

The FOB bathroom in a box, formally known as a “sanitary unit,”
is a container divided into two sections with one area for
toilets and wash basins and one with three shower stalls. Also
decked out in stainless steel, it even comes equipped with a
water softener and a bug zapper. The water treatment system,
hydrostatic system and water heater are compartementalized in a
separate area.

An FOB laundry in a box provides six Miele industrial washing
machines and dryers enough for 250 soldiers. It has an insect
trap and even an automatic soap dispensing system.

Both the loo and laundry boxes can be set up by two people within
two hours.

Waste disposal, essentially an incinerator system, also comes in
the standard 20-foot container. This incinerator can handle all
sorts of waste except glass and provides approximately 97 percent
reduction in waste volume, producing sterile ash that surpasses
the current IMO requirements. Two people can set this up in about
six hours.

LEGO brick-style, the containers can be combined to build larger
rooms and structures connected by gas-tight packings and the
company's proprietary connecting system. The corner posts have a
leveling system that makes it very easy to adjust the structure,
removing the limitation of finding flat ground.

The equipment is pre-mounted in the container and already
connected to water, drains and electricity, making the set up
time far swifter than it could be. Easily disassembled and
transported, after the mission is completed these “boxes” can be
stored or re-used for other ones.

The FOB in a box (or “containerized base camp solution”) makes a
whole lot of sense -- not just for the military, but for
humanitarian operations and aid organizations.